This chapter explores the issue of an outsider entering an existing business network in an interactive, interdependent and interconnected business world. Developing the new venture appears a ‘mission impossible’ as the new venture has no relationship in the relevant network or a tenuous one at best. The critical issue and major difficulty for the new company are to make established business actors perceive that there are good reasons to admit the new venture into the existing business network. The fate of the new venture, its acceptance by at least some other business actors, will largely depend on how the incumbents perceive the new company to affect their existing relational assets which result from past investments. In attempting to become a new node of a business relationship, the ‘management’ of the new venture has to address two issues. First, it has to find some actors interested in relating to the new venture and to engage them in developing the initial business relationships. Second, the new venture has to manage the networking that is combining the initial relationships with each other. The authors identify and discuss six spaces for action for new business ventures related to these two challenges.

Havenvid, M., La Rocca, A., New Business Development in Business Networks, in Håkan Håkansso, H. H., Ivan Snehot, I. S. (ed.), No Business is an Island: Making Sense of the Interactive Business World, Emerald Group Publishing Ltd., Bingley 2017: 87- 103. 10.1108/978-1-78714-549-820171005 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/178602]

New Business Development in Business Networks

La Rocca, Antonella
2017

Abstract

This chapter explores the issue of an outsider entering an existing business network in an interactive, interdependent and interconnected business world. Developing the new venture appears a ‘mission impossible’ as the new venture has no relationship in the relevant network or a tenuous one at best. The critical issue and major difficulty for the new company are to make established business actors perceive that there are good reasons to admit the new venture into the existing business network. The fate of the new venture, its acceptance by at least some other business actors, will largely depend on how the incumbents perceive the new company to affect their existing relational assets which result from past investments. In attempting to become a new node of a business relationship, the ‘management’ of the new venture has to address two issues. First, it has to find some actors interested in relating to the new venture and to engage them in developing the initial business relationships. Second, the new venture has to manage the networking that is combining the initial relationships with each other. The authors identify and discuss six spaces for action for new business ventures related to these two challenges.
2017
Inglese
No Business is an Island: Making Sense of the Interactive Business World
978-1-78714-550-4
Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.
Havenvid, M., La Rocca, A., New Business Development in Business Networks, in Håkan Håkansso, H. H., Ivan Snehot, I. S. (ed.), No Business is an Island: Making Sense of the Interactive Business World, Emerald Group Publishing Ltd., Bingley 2017: 87- 103. 10.1108/978-1-78714-549-820171005 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/178602]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/178602
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